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Top 10 Most Popular Ukrainian Foods
chefspencil ^

Posted on 02/26/2022 5:06:00 AM PST by mylife

Ukrainian foods belong to the Eastern European cuisine. Ukrainian borscht, varenyky, and salo might be familiar to many of you.

Indeed, traditional Ukrainian restaurants can’t help themselves cooking lots and lots of borscht and varenyky. Whenever they come up with a chef’s variation, they get drawn right back to the roots, because their clients say they want to taste authentic national food in its classic form. Of course, regional varieties of the same dish differ a lot. If you visit ten families in Ukraine, you will try ten kinds of borscht, you can be sure. And why? Because every region in Ukraine has its own popular meals, many influenced by Turkish, Polish or Crimean Tatars cuisine.

But also because Ukrainians love to be great hosts. So here come the top 10 dishes you will experience in any part of Ukraine, on weekdays and holidays .

(Excerpt) Read more at chefspencil.com ...


TOPICS: Chit/Chat; Food; Miscellaneous; Travel
KEYWORDS: borshch; borsht; cookery; food; ukrainian
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1 posted on 02/26/2022 5:06:00 AM PST by mylife
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To: mylife

The following was given to us by a Ukrainian neighbor we had once upon a time.
It was savory and delicious. Not at all what I’d expected. (See author’s comment #8) :)

Ukrainian Borsh

Ingredients

2 lb. (1 kg) meat (beef) or 1/2 Chicken
2~3 medium beets
2 Potatoes
1 head cabbage (small) or 1/2 ~ 2/3 large
2 onions
1 ~ 2 carrots
2 caps tomato juice (2~3 tbsp tomato paste) [NOTE: I believe caps meant cups]
1/4 cap chopped parsley (2 tbs dry parsley)
Salt
Sugar
Black pepper
3 garlic cloves

Broth preparation

Cut the meat in 1 in. cubes. Slightly broil 10 min. to push the fat out.
Place the meat, 1 small onion (whole cleaned but uncut), 1/2 carrot (whole)(and 1/2 parsley root optional) in a pot. Add water and 1 tea spoon of salt, boil the broth during 1.5 hours. In the end remove vegetables and roots from broth. (You can do broth evening day before the Borsh cooking)

Use large pot, prepare broth for little more than 1/2 pot. (You will have a large amount of vegetables, so give them enough space).

Borsh

Chop onions, put it in deep skillet and slightly brown. (Use cooking spry to minimize amount of fat during the frying) add chopped carrot, fry additional 5 min. Add chopped beets, fry 10 min. more until the vegetables become tender. Add tomato pasta or juice, little bit of sugar and stew additional 10 min.

Shred the cabbage.

If you use day before cooked broth, bring it to boil. Cut potatoes in cubes and put them in boiling broth, boil it 10~15 min. Add fried onion, carrot and beets and boil 10 min. Add shredded cabbage and boil 5~10 min.

In the end add 2 bay leaves, chopped garlic, dill, parsley and salt to taste. At this point you can try to balance taste adding a little more tomato juice (or paste), sugar (if borsch has too acid taste) or salt. Real Borscht must be sour, not sweet. Stir. Adjust for salt and pepper and add some cayenne to give borscht just a hint of spice. The borscht should be very thick (the expression goes that a large spoon should remain upright when inserted into the pot), and rich red in color.

Boil 3~5 min more. Try cabbage, it should be tender. Be sure potatoes are ready.

Turn off heat; Let the borsch to brew for half an hour.

Serve with dark rye bread and sour cream.

Comments.
1. You can use instead of meat, haricot beans, just 2/3 lb. (300 g).
2. As well you can add 1 tsp chopped paprika or Creole seasoning, bring it together with fried onion and carrot.
3. If you can’t eat fry food, stew vegetables.
4. Borsh can stay in refrigerator up to 4~5 days. On the 3rd day bring borsh to boil. When cooling it will stay 1~2 days more.
5. Do not warm up whole large pot. Just enough in small pot for next day serving. Leave large pot in refrigerator, until it will be not time for for 3rd day boiling.
6. DO NOT, under any circumstances, add sour cream to the borscht as part of the cooking process. Sour cream is always served on the side and added by individual diners.
7. Some people just add lemon juice or even vinegar during the cooking. DO NOT DO IT, it ruins color and taste.
8. Real Borsh is Ukrainian Borsh, Russia is the home of shit. There is no such things exist as “Russian Borsh”.
9. Although it is possible to make borscht with just vegetables, this is not the traditional way. Borscht by definition is made with beef (at least the Russian, more eastern, version). Borscht is also — again by definition — a hearty dish, often served as an entre, not as a small appetizer-style soup course more customary in the West. However, if you are a vegetarian, or just want to make a low calorie version of borscht, simply skip the meat step in my recipe and use fat-free veggie broth.


2 posted on 02/26/2022 5:13:29 AM PST by AFreeBird
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To: mylife

Russian livers...with some fava beans and a nice Chianti.


3 posted on 02/26/2022 5:14:51 AM PST by moovova
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To: mylife

Not bite-in.


4 posted on 02/26/2022 5:15:30 AM PST by Varsity Flight ( "War by the prophesies set before you." I Timothy 1:18)
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To: AFreeBird

Thanx!


5 posted on 02/26/2022 5:15:57 AM PST by mylife (It looks just like a telefunken U47... (===)
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To: mylife

My pleasure


6 posted on 02/26/2022 5:17:39 AM PST by AFreeBird
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To: AFreeBird

Oooooh, thanks for the authentic recipe!


7 posted on 02/26/2022 5:20:18 AM PST by ViLaLuz (2 Chronicles 7:14)
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To: mylife

Bkmk


8 posted on 02/26/2022 5:20:45 AM PST by Impala64ssa (If a liar's pants really did catch on fire CBC, ABC, CNN and MSNBC would be more fun to watch)
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To: mylife

I must say that the pic of borscht in the linked article doesn’t look anything like what the recipe I posted looked like. Vadime’s looked more like a chili. Which was what surprised me.


9 posted on 02/26/2022 5:21:11 AM PST by AFreeBird
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yesterday we had fish (haddock), perogi 3 ways (onion, cabbage, prune) and haluski at Teenies :P


10 posted on 02/26/2022 5:23:01 AM PST by mylife (It looks just like a telefunken U47... (===)
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To: AFreeBird

author states that every region has its own variation of the dish.


11 posted on 02/26/2022 5:24:26 AM PST by mylife (It looks just like a telefunken U47... (===)
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To: AFreeBird

Borsht is beet soup, simply.
Cook beets in meat broth and add anything you have in house, vegies, leftovers, sausage, stuff, anything!
Adding sour cream or heavy cream ( after cooking) makes a White Borscht.

There is also a Polish Borsht, which is just a clear beet soup with nothing (or almost nothing) in it. This can be bought in Jewish food sections of many grocery shops in the USA.
Quite different from Ukrainian Borsht, which is very hearty, full of stuff!
Great food!


12 posted on 02/26/2022 5:26:09 AM PST by AZJeep (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O0AHQkryIIs)
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To: mylife

True. But I’ll take his version any day.


13 posted on 02/26/2022 5:26:45 AM PST by AFreeBird
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To: mylife

Grew up when sections of town were Polish, Hungarian, Ukranian, etc. Pierogies, haluski, chicken paprikash, etc. Besides Easter & Christmas, local churches would have festivals around their patron saints and have a plethora of food, drink, music, etc.


14 posted on 02/26/2022 5:28:19 AM PST by P.O.E.
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To: mylife

The lekvar ones are my fave.


15 posted on 02/26/2022 5:29:05 AM PST by P.O.E.
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To: P.O.E.

we have those, but prunes?? I get onion.


16 posted on 02/26/2022 5:33:01 AM PST by mylife (It looks just like a telefunken U47... (===)
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To: P.O.E.

lot of hunkys round here.


17 posted on 02/26/2022 5:33:44 AM PST by mylife (It looks just like a telefunken U47... (===)
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To: AZJeep

I had Borsht in Kazahstan. It was remarkable. The best I could describe it was a hearty chicken soup with beets and cabbage. It was not served with sour cream, and did not have any vinegar.


18 posted on 02/26/2022 5:35:32 AM PST by keats5
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heck the pizza shop .4 mi from here has perogi pizza!


19 posted on 02/26/2022 5:43:38 AM PST by mylife (It looks just like a telefunken U47... (===)
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To: mylife

Ukrainian people suffered a lot thorough the history.
Hunted for slaves by Turks, oppressed by Tsars and communists...
As a results Ukrainians in general could not afford fancy steaks, hams, lobsters etc.
Ukrainian cuisine is a poor peasant cuisine, mostly grains and vegies, but make to taste excellent! Love it!


20 posted on 02/26/2022 5:51:35 AM PST by AZJeep (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O0AHQkryIIs)
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